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‘Money can't buy me love?': Re-evaluating the empowerment potential of loans to women in rural Bangladesh || ‘Can buy me love’? Re-evaluating the empowerment potential of loans to women in rural Bangladesh

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posted on 2024-09-05, 23:29 authored by Naila Kabeer
Credit programmes have become an increasingly important intervention for addressing poverty both in Bangladesh, and elsewhere, as a result of successive evaluations attesting to their important developmental benefits. The success of these programmes lies largely in the provision of subsidised access rather than of subsidised loans. Many charge the same rates of interest as the formal banking sector and have been able to use the funds raised to build their financial sustainability and institutional outreach. Through a strategy of direct lending or financial intermediation combined with reliance on group liability for loans in place of conventional collateral requirements which poor people can rarely fulfill, these programmes have ensured a supply of credit to those normally marginalised from the formal banking sector. They have consequently been credited with compensating for financial ‘market failure’, with reducing the reliance of the poor on usurious moneylenders and with enhancing the productivity of their livelihood efforts.. What has led to even greater interest in these programs is the documentation of the positive impacts associated with lending to poor women: both economic impacts in terms of poverty alleviation and higher repayment rates as well as more social ones to do with improvements in women’s position within family and society.

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Institute of Development Studies

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Kabeer, N. (1998) ‘Money can't buy me love?': Re-evaluating the empowerment potential of loans to women in rural Bangladesh. IDS Discussion paper series, 363. Brighton: IDS.

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IDS discussion papers 363

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IDS Discussion Paper

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IDS

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Bangladesh

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en

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